Black rose, Rosemarie

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Movie
German title Black rose, Rosemarie
Original title Black Rose, Rosemarie / Festival
Country of production Germany
Spain
original language German
Spanish
Publishing year 1960
length 83 minutes
Age rating FSK 6
Rod
Director César Fernández Ardavín
script César Fernández Ardavín
Paula Lepa (German dialogues)
production Alfons Carcasona
music Augusto Algueró
camera Mario Pacheco
cut Magdalena Pulido
Edith von Seydewitz
occupation

and Kurt Edelhagen with his orchestra

Black Rose, Rosemarie is a German-Spanish love story from 1960 starring Paul Hubschmid and Judith Dornys .

action

Rosemarie from Tübingen, who is a good professor's daughter by default, has escaped from the girls' boarding school and traveled to San Sebastian in northern Spain to take a course there to learn the local language. At this time, the International Film Festival is being held there. For this reason, the international film star Jack Lambert is also present in San Sebastian. It is almost besieged from all sides - by reporters and fans - and is therefore increasingly annoyed. His management has a precisely timed master plan to perfectly present his star and conducts Lambert's exhausting days in San Sebastián to the minute. He is urged by his people not to leave the hotel outside of public appointments. The film star therefore spends his free time in his four walls listless, leafing through magazines. After all, he's fed up with his golden cage and secretly sneaks outside through a back door to enjoy a bit of freedom and self-determination. He takes a taxi to the coast and strolls along the beach promenade.

One evening Rosemarie secretly sneaked into the festival event to get a taste of the uncomfortable film atmosphere with her daring friend Luise. When she wants to drive home in her car at night, the slightly tipsy Lambert runs, or rather staggers, right in front of the hood. Labert is a little dazed as he sits on the side of the road while Luise and Rosemarie take care of him. A Spanish policeman comes along and asks what happened. Rosemarie reacts in a flash and explains that her husband has become sick and that he wants to rest a little. The two girls bring Lambert back to his hotel room and Rosemarie keeps watch. Never again, she vows to herself, that she will secretly escape from her dormitory.

Despite the bad start, the two very dissimilar people, who nonetheless discover some similarities, quickly begin to like each other, whereby neither of the two knows the identity of the other. Jack wants to keep this secret as long as possible, because what he doesn't need at all at the moment is another admiring fan. And so Rosemarie and Jack start their ventures - for example on a trip to Monte Igueldo, with one Bathing trip in the bay or visiting an amusement park - to turtle each other continuously until shortly before the end of the film, while his management breaks out in sheer panic, as Jack is increasingly untraceable. But he enjoys his new freedoms to the full. Shortly before the end, when Jack Lambert presented his new film in San Sebastian and for the premiere of which he naturally had his people bring Rosemarie over as a guest of honor, the girl from Tübingen realizes who she has fallen in love with. Finally he proposes to Rosemary. She knows that Jack, who has to leave for London to film the next day, will be back.

Production notes

Schwarze Rose, Rosemarie was created on site in San Sebastian in 1960 and was first shown in Germany on April 21, 1962. In Austria, the strip started on August 3, 1962. The premiere took place on March 19, 1961 in Madrid.

criticism

Paimann's film lists spoke of a “somewhat stretched direction” and found that the film was otherwise “harmlessly amiable”.

The lexicon of international films called the film an "inconsequential moving piece in a formally modest framework".

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. In other sources she is called Irene Kaufmann
  2. Schwarze Rose, Rosemarie in Paimann's film lists
  3. Black Rose, Rosemarie. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed January 12, 2018 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used